logo
episode-header-image
Oct 2024
1h 3m

142. What’s Impacting American Workers?

Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher
About this episode
David Autor took his first economics class at 29 years old. Now he’s one of the central academics studying the labor market. The M.I.T. economist and Steve dissect the impact of technology on labor, spar on A.I., and discuss why economists can sometimes be oblivious. 
Up next
Nov 22
171. Measuring Pollution on Parallel Earths
<p>Michael Greenstone knows it’s corny, but he wants to make the world a better place — by tracking the impact of air quality, developing pollution markets in India, and … starting a podcast, which Steve says proves he’s over the hill.</p><p> </p><ul><li><strong>SOURCES:</strong> ... Show More
56m 1s
Nov 15
Suleika Jaouad’s Survival Mechanisms (Replay)
<p>Suleika Jaouad was diagnosed with cancer at 22. She made her illness the subject of a <i>New York Times</i> column and a memoir, <i>Between Two Kingdoms.</i> She and Steve talk about what it means to live with a potentially fatal illness, how to talk to people who've gone thro ... Show More
58m 46s
Nov 8
170. Finding the God Particle
<p>Physicist and former pop star Brian Cox tells Steve about discovering the Higgs boson, having a number-one hit, and why particle physics research will almost certainly not create a black hole that destroys all life on earth.</p><p> </p><ul><li><strong>SOURCES:</strong><ul><li> ... Show More
59m 10s
Recommended Episodes
Nov 2024
How to Stop Worrying and Love the Robot Apocalypse (Update)
<p>It’s true that robots (and other smart technologies) will kill many jobs. It may also be true that newer collaborative robots (“cobots”) will totally reinvigorate how work gets done. That, at least, is what the economists are telling us. Should we believe them?</p><p> </p><ul> ... Show More
48m 36s
Oct 2024
605. What Do People Do All Day?
<p>Sixty percent of the jobs that Americans do today didn’t exist in 1940. What happens as our labor becomes more technical and less physical? And what kinds of jobs will exist in the future? </p><p> </p><ul><li><strong>SOURCES:</strong><ul><li><a href="https://economics.mit.edu/ ... Show More
1 h
May 2025
634. “Fault-Finder Is a Minimum-Wage Job”
<p>Austan Goolsbee, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, is less reserved than the average banker. He explains why vibes are overrated, why the Fed’s independence is non-negotiable, and why tariffs could bring the economy back to the Covid era.</p><p> </p><ul><li><st ... Show More
1h 2m
Mar 2025
627. Sludge, Part 1: The World Is Drowning in It
<p>Insurance forms that make no sense. Subscriptions that can’t be cancelled. A never-ending blizzard of automated notifications. Where does all this sludge come from — and how much is it costing us? (Part one of a <a href="https://freakonomics.com/podcast-tag/sludge">two-part se ... Show More
54m 34s
Sep 17
Is the World Ready for a Guaranteed Basic Income? (Update)
<p>A lot of jobs in the modern economy don’t pay a living wage, and some of those jobs may be wiped out by new technologies. So what’s to be done? We revisit an episode from 2016 for a potential solution.</p><p> </p><ul><li><strong>SOURCES:</strong><ul><li><a href="https://www.br ... Show More
36m 2s
Aug 2024
What Exactly Is College For? (Update)
<p>We think of them as intellectual enclaves and the surest route to a better life. But U.S. colleges also operate like firms, trying to differentiate their products to win market share and prestige points. In the first episode of a special series originally published in 2022, we ... Show More
50m 15s
Sep 2024
Daron Acemoglu on Artificial Intelligence
<p><!-- wp:paragraph {"dropCap":true} --></p> <p class="has-drop-cap">Listening to the ongoing debate about artificial intelligence, one could be forgiven for assuming that the technology is either a bogeyman or a savior, with little ground in between. But that's not the stance o ... Show More
27m 33s
Sep 26
Is the U.S. Really Less Corrupt Than China? (Update)
<p>In this episode we first published in 2021, the political scientist Yuen Yuen Ang argues that different forms of government create different styles of corruption — and that the U.S. and China have more in common than we’d like to admit.</p><p> </p><ul><li><strong>SOURCES:</str ... Show More
57m 34s
Sep 2024
209. Why Do We Settle?
<p>Why does the U.S. use Fahrenheit when Celsius is better? Would you quit your job if a coin flip told you to? And how do you get an entire country to drive on the other side of the road?</p><p> </p><ul><li><strong>SOURCES:</strong><ul><li><a href="https://psychology.ku.edu/peop ... Show More
35m 2s
Mar 2025
625. The Biden Policy That Trump Hasn’t Touched
<p>Lina Khan, the youngest F.T.C. chair in history, reset U.S. antitrust policy by thwarting mega-mergers and other monopolistic behavior. This earned her enemies in some places, and big fans in others — including the Trump administration. Stephen Dubner speaks with Khan about he ... Show More
1h 3m